‘For Colored Girls’ Broadway Revival Makes It The First Show To Be Directed and Choreographed By a Black Woman in 65 Years

Tony-nominated dancer Camille A. Brown makes history as both Director and Choreographer for the historic collection of poetic monologues

Ntozake Shangeโ€™s revered choreopoem, โ€œโ€œfor colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf,โ€ made a highly anticipated return on Broadway earlier this month. It originally opened in New York Cityโ€™s Booth Theatre in 1976. Shange pioneered the term โ€œchoreopoem,โ€ which combines elements of music, dance and poetry. โ€œFor colored girlsโ€ was groundbreaking as the first of its kind in the literary world.

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Its return is historic for one particular reason: Tony-nominated choreographer Camille A. Brown, who is making her directorial debut with โ€œfor colored girls,โ€ is the first Black woman to both direct and choreograph a Broadway production in 65 years. Brown is a Guggenheim Award recipient and known for productions such as โ€œOnce On This Island,โ€ โ€œChoir Boyโ€ and โ€œFire Shut Up in My Bones.โ€ In an interview with Variety, she explained the significance of Shangeโ€™s work.

โ€œThis is a play thatโ€™s passed down between Black women. It was passed to me from my mother, who told me โ€˜donโ€™t ever let anyone take your stuff away,โ€™โ€ she stated. โ€œโ€˜For colored girlsโ€™ is literally passed between women in that way, but itโ€™s also a spiritual passing of information, love, vulnerability and sisterhood. The aspect of Black women coming together in a space to empower each other is something thatโ€™s necessary for me,โ€ Brown said. โ€œAs Black women, there is necessity to our collectivity.โ€

Shange, who passed away in 2018 at the age of 70, first published the collection of poems in 1975; they would be transformed into a play just one year later. In 2010, โ€œfor colored girlsโ€ became a film written, produced and directed by Tyler Perry. The ensemble cast featured Whoopi Goldberg, Kerry Washington, Janet Jackson, Phylicia Rashad, Thandiwe Newton and Tessa Thompson.

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